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11.1: A Structural Functionalist Look at Family Resources

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    308854
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    Since earliest human record, the family has been a group of persons committed to meeting one another's economic needs. This is a vital function of the modern family. As newborns enter the family, they are fed and clothed, and are protected and nurtured into childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. When they leave home they continue to receive economic support, typically even into the college experience. Many adults receive financial help from family even after they graduate college, marry, and enter the workplace.

    Functionalists would say that the family serves many functions for a society. Among them are replacing members of society by giving birth to and socializing children, regulating sexual activity, supporting family members economically, providing a place for society's members to feel loved and secure, and providing a sense of social status in society. \({ }^1\)

    In one study of 1,727 parents of college students it was reported that "college students' finances were of extreme or great concern to nearly half the parents." Other findings reported by parents indicated that cell phones were the preferred method of communication. \({ }^2\)

    Parents not only continue to provide economic support, they also provide social and emotional support to their college-aged children. Many have noted that among college students today, "adulthood" may not be the best word to describe them. They continue to be dependent upon their parents at some level into their late 20's. Perhaps "young adulthood" or in some cases "extended adolescence" is more accurately descriptive. In the U.S. colleges and universities are the gateways to financial security and opportunity; the higher the education the higher the income.

    In 2008 over half the U.S. population had some college experience with 38 percent graduating at some level. \({ }^3\) In 2007 income levels by education showed a clear pattern of more money earned by those who have more education. \({ }^4\) About \(45 \%\) of the U.S. population does not attend a college or university and some drop out of high school. This is a dual-edged issue. On one side poor people get lower quality K-12 education than middle and upper class people; thus, they have financial hardships that prevents their access to the gateway to financial security. However their lower financial and educational status undermines healthy and self-promoting lifestyles. Poorer people are more likely to be victimized by crime, commit crime, be hungry, cohabit and/or divorce, or be abused. Children raised in poorer families are of great concern.


    Footnotes

    1. Child Poverty Rates Increased as Recession Began. Retrieved 30 November 2009 from http://www.ncsl.org/default.aspx?tabid=18557

    2. Basic Facts about Low-income Children, by Wight, V.R. and Chau, M. Nov 2009; retrieved 31 March, 2010 from http://www.nccp.org/publications/pub_892.html

    3. Retrieved 22 April 2009 The 2009 HHS Poverty Guidelines from http://aspe.hhs.gov/POVERTY/09poverty.shtml

    4. Asian data not available until 1990Retrieved 22 April, 2009 from Table 693. Families Below poverty Level and Below 125 Percent of Poverty Level by Race and Hispanic Origin: 1980 to 2006 from http://www.census.gov/compendia/stat...es/09s0693.pdf


    11.1: A Structural Functionalist Look at Family Resources is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.